October 07, 2014

Napoleon Met His Waterloo Because He Used The Wrong Map!

As time passes we learn more and more about the past. Enormous inroads have been made into the study of dinosaurs and archeology, for example, and I have posted a few of them. But this one is for the history books and movies, like Désirée.

Much of this knowledge is due to our advances in technology.

NAPOLEON brought defeat
at Waterloo upon himself through arrogance, blunders and the use of a faulty
map, according to a documentary that has shattered the French popular view that
he was a military genius.

The program, broadcast by the
France 3 channel, stunned Napoleon’s admirers as it debunked the conventional
wisdom that he lost to the Duke of Wellington in 1815 only because of a mistake
by one of his generals, the Marquis de Grouchy.

L’Ombre d’un
doute (The hint of a doubt) places the
responsibility for the fiasco at Napoleon’s feet, with French historian Franck
Ferrand portraying the emperor as a waning and self-satisfied figure in the
run-up to the battle.

It said the emperor had never
recovered from a suicide attempt a year earlier, when he took a vial of opium.
Napoleon’s life was saved — much to his own despair — but he never regained his
strategic prowess, according to the documentary.

His failings were highlighted by
the inaccurate map he used to pinpoint British troops behind Mont-Saint-Jean
farm near Waterloo. The map put the farm on the left-hand side of a bend in the
road, when it was on the right-hand side of a straight road. As a result, the
French cannon balls fell short of the British positions.

“We realised that there was a
printer’s error,” Mr Ferrand said. “The strategic tool used by the emperor in
his ultimate battle was therefore false.”

He had failed to ensure that the
British and Prussian positions were known before the battle, and also failed to
deliver the sort of rousing speech that had lifted the morale of his troops
before his victories, such as at Austerlitz.

Claims that Napoleon was
diminished at Waterloo have long been made by military historians. Never,
however, have they been aired on primetime television in France, where Napoleon
is widely seen as the greatest military mind in history.

The emperor himself blamed the
defeat on de Grouchy’s failure to prevent Gebhard Leberecht von Blucher, the
Prussian field marshal, coming to Wellington’s aid.

De Grouchy, who was at the head
of 34,000 men, become bogged down in a fight with the Prussian rearguard
kilometres from Waterloo, enabling Blucher to march on to the main
battlefield.

Napoleon later wrote that de
Grouchy’s behaviour had been unpredictable, effectively absolving himself of
blame.

Clip above: Jon English: "Waterloo" which he wrote and recorded some years ago. An easy choice for me as I think it's a great song and tells the story well.By Adam Sage With thanks to The Australian